![UC Merced had over 1,000 donors contribute to the Give Tue UC Merced campaign](https://externalrelations.ucmerced.edu/sites/externalrelations.ucmerced.edu/files/news/image/gt_2018_-_results_hero_image.png)
For the second straight year, UC Merced surpassed its goal of 1,000 donors in a single day for the Give Tue UC Merced campaign.
Over $170,000 was raised — with the help of a generous matching gift from Foster Poultry Farms — for the Build the Future Scholarship Fund. In five years of the university’s annual day of giving, over $1.5 million has been raised through donations and matching gifts, including a previous gift from the Wells Fargo Foundation.
Over half of the donations came on campus — either at the Give Tue headquarters at the Lantern or through transactions at the campus bookstore and Summits Marketplace — and most of those were from students.
“I’ve always liked helping people and I feel like I’ve made a contribution to someone who will need that money in the future,” said Jorge Mendieta, a sophomore computer science major.
![Students donated at the Give Tue headquarters at the Lantern](https://externalrelations.ucmerced.edu/sites/externalrelations.ucmerced.edu/files/news/image/lantern.gif)
Greeting students at the Lantern was Carolyn Vara, president of the San Joaquin Valley UC Alumni Network and a longtime UC Merced supporter.
In what has become an annual tradition, Vara spent the afternoon matching student, faculty and staff contributions with a thousand $1 bills she brought with her. Several students said Vara’s presence contributed to their desire to take part in Give Tue UC Merced.
“I think it’s a good way to engage people to donate because if she hadn’t come up to me and said ‘I’ll match your donation,’ I probably would have donated a dollar,” sophomore English major Arturo Raudales said. “Instead, with her matching, I can make a bigger impact by donating more and having that be doubled.”
Senior biology major Kyle Danh agreed that Vara played a role in her donation.
“It makes it feel like what I’m giving is worth it, and I think it is really important for donors to feel like the cause is worth it for you,” Danh said.
![Arturo Raudales (left) and Jorge Mendieta donate while Carolyn Vara matches another student's contribution](https://externalrelations.ucmerced.edu/sites/externalrelations.ucmerced.edu/files/news/image/students_giving.gif)
UC Merced Foundation diplomat Jane Binger, Ed.D., and her husband, UC Merced Foundation Trustee Robert Bernstein, M.D., offered a match of their own to encourage student donations — a $1,500 gift that added $5 to the first 300 gifts from students.
For Raudales and Danh, giving back to the university meant supporting students who have had a path to UC Merced that is similar to their own.
“Knowing that it would go back to the school as a scholarship and helping out students who are like me — first-generation, low-income — I feel like even if it is a small donation, helping out in that aspect would make me feel better and eventually give back to the community,” Raudales said.
“If I didn’t have financial aid, I wouldn’t be able to go to college,” said Danh. “So I think it’s important that everyone can afford it.”